PAVE POUR I fHE MICHIGAIN DAILY VV L )NLs )Av, 0( 'I bt!,kt 23, 1953 PAGE E'OUR WLi)Nk4Sk)A~, UCfOBi~I~ Z~, 1953 I I --;;;Q After Four Months, Bare S tatis tics By VIRGINIA VOSS Daily Editorial Director THE Eisenhower Administration last week released four-month results of "doing its own policing" of the government's secur- ity program. A look at the administration's blotter on the subject reveals some inter- esting, but bare, statistics. According to White House announce- ments, 1,456 federal employes were dis- missed from government jobs between May 27 and Sept. 30, the first four months of Eisenhower's revised loyalty policy. The only breakdown statistics made public indicated that 863 of the ousters were made for security reasons, 593 represented resignations turned in under pressure of adverse information 'held by the govern- ment and all except five of the total were hired by previous administrations. The bareness of the available statistics points up a basic defect in Eisenhower's se- curity system, What differentiates it from Truman's program is the fact that all those who can be called detrimental to national security-from politically disloyal persons to psychologically unfit ones-are classified together as security risks. And information the public is entitled to have-a breakdown of dismissal lists differentiating political undesirables from the sexual pervert, the drug addict and the- habitual drinker-is buried in lump- sum statistics. Also buried is the possibili- ty of comparing the total political risk dis- missal of one administration with those of another. Although no further breakdown figures have been made available, the Executive Order which put the President's security program in motion allows departments and agencies concerned to release more detailed reports of dismissals and forced resigna- tions. The provision should have been stated more positively. Whether from the White House or from lesser agencies, the public is certainly en- titled to a closer examination of "security risk" dismissals, that designation being at present a somewhat meaningless term. SL Elections "OTE FOR Joe Dpakes for better gov- ernment, etc." You'll be seeing those words more and more prominently every day. Some will be more cleverly worded perhaps, but very like- ly won't say or mean any more. Twice each year a group of candidates announce to the campus that they think themselves qualified to represent and leg- islate for the students of the University of Michigan. The students in turn look over the signs, laugh at the ones repre- senting magazine covers, then try to pick out friends for whom they can vote. No one, neither the candidates nor the voters, seems to grasp fully what the elec- tion is all about. What is the Student Leg- islature and what difference does it make just who is elected? First, the Student Legislature is the most significant student organization on campus, and secondly, it makes all the difference in the world who is elected. Ever since the Legislature was organized in 1946, students have been disputing the first point. They point to the various times the body has been thwarted in different ventures. They point to the times the ad- ministration has not even bothered to con- sult the Legislature in matters directly af- fecting the students. Of course, the SL hasn't been complet- ely helpless and its members can just as easily point to its accomplishments and the work it is doing right now. But more relevant is what the Legislature will do in the future. It is still a young or- ganization and has had to fight for recog- nition. It is difficult to put your foot down on matters when no one is watching you do it. The prospects for the future look better every day. Such accomplishments as the academic freedom proclamation, work 'on exam schedule revision, a recommendatioTa for a new University vice-president for stu- dent affairs-all these and more shows that SL is beginning to realize its own potential and move in that direction. Students must understand that this is a slow-moving and difficult process, but that through such a student body, they can take their wisest and most powerful course of action. But what about the people we want to carry on this work? Thirty-six students have announced their candidacy. Des- pite an increase of three over last year this is still a small total for 23 positions. Only about one out of every three won't be elected. We must make very sure it is the right people, then, who are picked. We want people with ideas, with ambi- tions, and with plans. We need people who can see a job that needs doing and are will- ing to devote all their energy to doing it. When we try to vote our friends into BMOC ranking, we are doing a tremendous injus- Befuddled Secretary Or Befuddled Critics? The Man From Mars m - - MWA% r CRITICISM OF the treatment meted out to Milo Radulovich by the Air Force has become widespread and strong, and jus- tifiably so. But we must be clear about the reasons for our objection. Confused think- ing and irrelevant argument can only weak- en Radulovich's case, and jeopardize the struggle to maintain our civil liberties. The case in point is the eagerness with which Secretary of Defense Wilson was atacked following the remarks he made here Friday. It has been asserted in these columns that he had indulged in "double talk" concerning the relationship between the individual and the state. The impli- cation, was that the Radulovich case in- volves a choice between the rights of the individual and the security of the state, and that the poor secretary was rather be- fuddled about the choice. However, it seems that Mr. Wilson's po- sition was hardly contradictory, and that it was made to appear so in order to add fuel to the fire of indignation about Radulovich. Mr. Wilson said: "It looks as though we were giving the individual too much of a break. In cases of doubtful loyalty, the in- terests of the nation should come 'first. Working for the government is a privilege, not a right." Later he said: "It (our gov- ernment) recognizes the essential dignity and inherent importance of the individual and his inalienable personal rights .. . The Constitution of our country was designed in part to protect the citizens against any at- tempt by even government itself to invade these inalienable rights." It is not enough to view these statements in the abstract and conclude that they are contradictory. True, they do not say the same thing, and national security and the rights of the individual can conflict in some situations. But they need not neces- sarily contradict each other, and in any par- ticular case it must be shown, not simply assumed, that they do conflict. Government employment is not one of the "inalienable rights" which Americans have been guaranteed. Mr. Wilson made that clear. As a general rule, the govern- ment can hire and fire whomever it pleas- es, although reservations might be made in certain cases. "Guilt by kinship," as The New York Times termed the standard used in the Ra- dulovich case, may seem unreasonable and repugnant to us. But that it conflicts in this case with any right which we have been guaranteed is a dubious proposition at best. Certainly it has not been shown to contra- dict the Constitution. When we speak of "inalienable rights" we are not talking about a meaningless abstraction, but about those rights enu- merated in the Constitution. Surely we have enough trouble defending the Bill of Rights to deter us from doing battle for nebulous causes. The Radulovich decision seems unfortu- nate because it leaves us incredulous as to the reality of the security risk involved, not because we believe the Air Force was violat- ing a Constitutional right to government employment. Let us base our protest on valid grounds. -Carl Zimmerman rA ON TE WASHINGTON MEHREY-GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON JA M ATITE; R FACT DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ". By JOSEPH ALSOP TAIPEI, Formosa-The best way to begin a report on Formosa is with a personal reminiscence. On a broiling day in the early summer of 1941, this reporter first landed at the fantastic river airport between cliffs that used to be Chungking's link with the outer world. The experience was unforgettable. The filthy, teeming, half-ruined Chungking of the period, with its three or four daily air raids, its government in a state of half- suspended animation, its hopes and fears, bitter discords and dumb doggedness, was a place that made an indelible impression. The worst part of it was the immediate disillusionment. In those days, the government of General- issimo Chiang Kai-shek and the Free Chi- nese resistance to Japan were still being painted in America in the most luridly fav- orable colors. But instead of the unalloyed purity and patriotism advertised by Free China's American friends, one immediately discovered all the weaknesses of incompe- tence, corruption and disorganization that were to contribute so greatly to the defeatj of the Nationalists by the Chinese Commun- ists. Going down the old Burma Road a little later with Tillman Durdin, the excellent' "New York Times" correspondent, I asked about this puzzling business. After all, Free China's continued resistance to Japan was in itself a triumph. Why was this not good enough? Why did everyone then writing about China overpaint the good and alto- gether overlook the bad? Durdin grinned and replied: "Oh, you know, nobody ever tells on China." Not very long after that, the exaggerat- ed American praise gave way to equally exaggerated abuse. What had been abso- lutely white became absolutely black, with even more unfortunate effects on American policy. The original falsehood which was intended to help China, inevi- tably begot the violent reaction which greatly damaged China's cause. These long forgottert facts are necessary to remember today, because here in Formosa the same silly cycle has started all over again. The professional enthusiasts for Generalis- simo Chiang Kai-shek and his government, like Sen. William Knowland and William C. Bullitt, have grossly oversold Formosa in the United States. Where one would like only to praise, it is necessary to begin by stripping away the complicated false fronts that have been erected to conceal Formo- san realities. .First of all, this government here in For- mosa is not an unblemished free democracy. The people here have considerably more voice than they ever did on the Chinese mainland, and vastly more attention is paid to popular opinion and to the people's welfare. But this island still teems with an extraordinary variety of secret police agencies. Probably the most influential man after Chiang Kai-shek himself is the generalissimo's son, Gen. Chiang Ching-kuo, who is essentially the secret police chief. And at least as long as the Communist threat exists, the Formosa gov- ernment will continue, and continue of necessity, to be predominantly a police regime. Second, the generalissimo's efforts andj American military aid have not created a powerful military force which can be hurled What has been accomplished with the generalissimo's army is in most ways ad- mirable, but it has not produced a decisive threat on the Chinese Communist flank. The generalissimo himself has told the Am- erican authorities that he cannot return to the mainland until he has far more than doubled his present force, which is physi- cally impossible. But even if the force re- quirements are not inflated in this manner, American and Chinese planning and pre- paration have got to be radically adjusted before the Communist flank is genuinely threatened from Formosa. Third, the generalissimo's government is not supported by 200,000 or 300,000 or 500,000 anti-Communist guerillas on the Chinese mainland. The Chinese nationalists have done their best to sustain a guerilla movement with lavish American aid. (The agency of Am- erican Aid, "Western Enterprises, Incorpor- ated," must surely be the most uncovered covert organization in the world, with its own P.X. commissary, two social clubs, and a housing development locally known as "Spook Centre.") But the Communist po- lice have largely defe.ted the best efforts that could be made here. There are not more than a few thousand active guerillas on the mainland today. And even the coas- tal pinprick raiders that are miscalled guer- illas here in Formosa are now being frus- trated by stronger Communist coastal de- fenses. * * * THE BEGINNING of good sense about For- mosa is the realization that this is not an ideal democracy with a mighty arm and a powerful resistance movement waiting to welcome the army on the mainland. With the false fronts out of the way, you can then form a judgment of Formosa by the only sensible standard - the standard of where this show started and how far it has come to date. This island, after all, was the scene of one of the ugliest episodes in the carnival of Chinese Nationalist misrule that pre- ceded the Chinese Communist triumph. Here, in 1947, after the most shameless pillage of the provincial treasury, Gov. Chen Yi treacherously massacred some- thing like 300 leading Formosans whom he had cordially invited to outline their grievances to him. (The Generalissimo none the less gave Chen Yi another pro- vincial governorship in China proper, and then, rather happily, had to cut off Chen Yi's head because he was discovered to have sold out to the Communists.) Here too in 1949, the broken remnants of forty-five armies were unloaded from ships so horribly crowded that the bodies of the living held up the bodies of those who died from exposure in the packed mobs standing on the naked decks. Here, brave old Gen. Chen Cheng, now Prime Minister, barely averted a Communist take over by disarm- ing these hapless men as they came ashore and housing, feeding and reforming the well nigh desperate troops after removing their more worthless commanders. Here, as late as 1950, a Communist plot was discov- ered reaching as high as a vice chief of the General Staff, with a radio transmitter in the very capitol building itself. From such beginnings, the generalis- simo and old Chen Cheng and the others have formed a government that is ener- getic, honest, and distinctly forward look-j ing in its dealings with the Formosans. ThvhnPhit nn- m- -m + tat a ti WASHINGTON-"In what royal family has the father and all his sons ascended the throne?" asked Mrs. A. Mitchell Palmer at an embassy dinner the other day. Part of the answer arrives in Washington today-King Paul of Greece. He is the third son of King Constantine, who, together with all three of his sons, has ruled over the friendly, turbulent, vitally strategic country of Greece. King Constantine, considered pro-German, was removed by the Allies in 1917. His son Alexander, who succeeded him, was bitten by a monkey and died. His father came back to the throne in 1920, to ,be succeeded the same year by Crown Prince George, who, after being put on and off the throne, and after heading his government during the hectic World War II years, died in 1949. His younger brother Paul, now being welcomed in Washington, succeeded George and, thanks to a devoted wife plus American aid, has remained permanent and popular. In a country where living is rough, politics rough, and where the man in the street takes out his troubles on the crown, this is a real achievement. FLABBERGASTED AMBASSADOR AMBASSADOR ATHANASE POLITIS of Greece was sitting in his embassy on Massachusetts Avenue trying to dodge phone calls from society matrons angling for invitations to the already jam-packed reception for the King and Queen of Greece. "Someone else who wants an invitation," he murmured to himself. as George C. Vournas, prominent Washington attorney, walked in. "I have brought the deed to the three lots next to your embassy," announced Vournas. "As you know, they were purchased some years ago by the late William G. Helis. Now his son has decided to present them to the government of Greece. "Mr. Helis, Jr., is anxious to carry out his father's dream of solidi- fying Greek-American friendship," continued Vournas, "and would like to contribute this land for the purpose of erecting a building in which Greek art, handicraft, and the work of the Greek people can be displayed. Mr. Helis believes that the school children who come to Washington every year would be greatly interested in visiting such a building." Ambassador Politis looked at the three deeds, duly executed in favor of the Greek government. "Do you mean to say that this property is now really ours'?" he asked. "You can go out and hold Greek dances on it tomorrow," replied Helis' attorney. EZRA BENSON'S ERRORS SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE Ezra T. Benson is a sincere believ- er in the biblical teaching that the righteous shall be rewarded and that the guilty shall atone for their sins and errors. It is highly doubtful that he has committed any grevious sins; though he would be the first to admit his errors. And today he may look back with regret on a meeting in the National Press Club auditorium three years ago when his friends, the American Live- stock Association, the American Meat Institute, the Farm Bureau, et al, rallied to knock down price ceilings and let the price of meat find its own levekl The meeting was held as perspiring, beleaguered Mike Di Salle, then price administrator, was trying to roll back the price of meat. (Continued from Page 2) Academic Notices Electrical Engineering Seminar. Mr. Charles M. Edwards of Bendix Aviation Corporation, Research Laboratories, will give a talk on "Analog Computer Am- plifiers for Real Time Simulation Prob- lems" on Thurs., Oct. 29, at 4 p.m, in 3086 East Engineering Building. Mathematics Colloquium, Fri., Oct. 25, at 4:10 p.m., in 3011 Angell Hall. In- stead of the previously scheduled talk, the Colloquium will hear an address by Professor L. E. J. Brouwer of University of Amsterdam. Coffee and tea at 3:45 in 3212 Angell Hall. Sociology Colloquium. Dr. Harlan Gilmore, Visiting Professor of Sociolo- gy from Tulane University, will discuss "Transportation and Social Systems" at the third Sociology Colloquium sponsored by the Student-Faculty Committee, Wed., Oct. 28, at 4 p.m. in Auditorium "C," Mason Hall. Everyone is cordially invited to attend. Course 401, the Interdisciplinary Sem- inar on the Application of Mathemat- ics to the Social Sciences, will meet on Thurs., Oct. 29, at 4 p.m. in 3409 Mason Hall. Mr. John Modrick of the Psychology Department will speak on "Further Experimentation on Choice in an 'Estes-Type' Situation." Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Oct. 29, at 4 In 247 West Engineering. Speaker: Professor R. V. Churchill. Topic: Operational Calculus Based on Legendre Integral Trans- forms." Engineering Mechanics Seminar. Prof. M. A. Brull will speak on "Some Prob- lems of Aero Structures" at 3:45 p.m. on Wed., Oct. 28, in 101 West Engi- neering Building. Refreshments will be served. Preliminary Examinations in Linguis- tics. The next group of preliminary ex- aminations for the doctorate in lin- guistics will be given on Fri., Nov. 13, andtSat., Nov. 14. Students planning to take these examinations are asked to report to Professor Joseph K. Yama- giwa, 2021 Angell Hall, by October 31. Concerts Faculty Concert. Due to a reservation conflict, the recital by Marian Owen, pianist, previously anounced for Mon., Nov. 23, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. has been changed to Tues., Dec. 1. Events Today Linguistics Club, Meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building. James W. Marchand, University graduate student and in- structor in German, Wayne University, will speak on "A Note on the Historical Explanation of the Gothic Vowel Sys- tem," and Dr. Kenneth L. Pike, As- sociate Professor of Linguistics, will speak on "A Linguistic Excursion to Britain." All students and faculty mem- bers interested in the scientific study language are invited. Michigan Union Opera. There will be Dancing Chorus tryouts today from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 in Room 3-G of the Michigan Union. Chess Club of the University of Michi- gan will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3D, Michigan Union. Pon Byrne, University of, Michigan gradu- ate student and nationally recognized chess master, will give an exhibition simultaneous match, visitors and new players welcome. Spanish Play. All men interested in trying out for the Spanish play report to 414 Romance Languages Building on Wed., Oct. 28, or Friday, Oct. 30, be- tween 3 and 4 p.m. The Heiress. Tonight, promptly at 8 p.m., the Department of Speech will present The Heiress in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. This recent Broad- way hit was suggested by Henry James' novel, "Washington Square," and was dramatized for the stage by Ruth and Augustus Goetz. Tickets are on sale at the Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office, north end of the League, from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. Phi Lambda Upsilon. The Delta Chap- ter will hold its first fall meeting at 7:30 p.m., West Conference Room, Rack- ham Building. Professor W. J. Elte- man, of the School of -Business Ad- ministration, will discuss investments, "Some Aspects of the Technique of Bull Coming Events Pi Lambda Theta will hold the first fall meeting on Thurs., Oct. 29, at 8 p.m., in the Assembly Room of the Rackham Building, The Kaffee Stunde of the Deutscher verein will meet Thurs., Oct. 29, at 3:15 in the taproom of the Union, Infor- mal groupp conversation in German. All are invited to attend these lively meetings. U. of M. Law School Student Bat Association presents the third In Its series of special lectures on the Prac- tice of Law. Edward P. Thompson, of the Kalamazoo Bar, will speak on "Di- vorce Practice and Procedure," 7 p.m., Thurs., Oct. 29, 120 Hutchins Hall. All interested persons are invited. Ukrainian Students' Club. Meeting will be held Thurs., Oct. 29, at 7 p.m. in the Madelon Pound House (1024 Hill St.) Discussion on the study of the Ukrainian Language. Guests are wel- come. Graduate Record Concert. The first of a new series of Graduate Record Concerts will be held this Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Women's Lounge of Rack- ham Building. Each concert will be about two hours long, and this first concert will include works by Haydn, Brahms, and Prokofkev y The records will be played on the new music sys- tem. All graduate students welcome. La p'tlte causette will meet tomor- row afternoon from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. in the wing of the north room of the Michigan Union cafeteria. All students interested in improving their French are invitedl Near East Society, Thurs., Oct. 29, Room 3B, Michigan Union, 7:30 p.m. Mr. Cyril Cane, former British Diplo- mat to Morocco, will speak; a question and answer period will follow. Coffee will be served, Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent Breakfast following 7 a.m. serv. ice of Holy Communion, Thurs., Oct. 29. Canterbury House. The English Journal Club will hold Its first meeting of the year on Thurs., Oct. 29, at 8 p.m. in the East Confer- ence Room in the Rackham Building. Professor W. G. Rice, Chairman of the English Department, will lead a dis- cussion on "Prospects for Prospective Ph.D.'s." All graduate students and faculty members of the English De- partment are invited to attend. Roger Williams Guild. Yoke Fellow- ship meets Thursday morning at , a.m. in the church Prayer Room. You are cordially invited to join. in with this continually growing group. International Center Weekly Tea will be held Thurs., Oct, 29, from 4:30 to B at the International Center. Christian Science Organization. Tes- timony meeting Thurs, Oct. 29, at 7:30, Fireside room, Lane Hall. All are wel- come. Congregational - Disciples Guild. Breakfast group meeting in the Guild House Chapel, 7 a.m. Please sign up or call Guild House by Wednesday after- noon if you are coming. Kappa Phi. Supper and program Thursday at 5:15 at the Methodist Church. The 'Ensian picture will be taken at 5:30. All actives and pledges are requested to come. Alpha Phi Omega. Pledge meeting Thurs., Oct. 29, 7:30 p.m., in APO Of- fice, SL Building. All pledges are re- quired to attend. Unpaid initial fees must be paid at this time. Hillel Foundation presents Music-For All, classical music on a Hi Fi Sound System, Thurs., Oct. 29, at 8 p.m. Ev- eryone is' welcome. A LL HUMAN beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. Everyone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration, without dis- tinction of any kind such as race, color, sex, language, religion, po- litical or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status. -World Declaration of Human Rights I 4 I f The Korean War was on. Beef was 125 per cent of parity. Di Salle and Bear Riding," at 8:30 p.m. Refres- ments. Th publi is ordiall invited, wanted to stop the inflation. But Benson and cattle friends wanted TheCpgbic -iscilysiGvitd prices to go higher. The Congregational - Disciples Guild. te + h ++n , t~n,-A , +1Y - . ri- . l. o of :Discussion group tonight at 7 p.m., 'Let the cattle breed,' theysand, Let mthe price itaeare0 itself." Eventually they succeeded. Di Salle was stopped from rolling back the price of beef to 100 per cent of parity. Instead, the price soared to 138 per cent. Eventually, Benson and his then warm friends, the cattlemen, abolished OPS altogether. Some years earlier, in the Hotel Washington, Benson attended another meeting aimed at undercutting the price controls of OPA. After the meeting he signed a joint press release, as the representative of the Cooperative Council for which he was Washington lobbyist, de- manding the end of OPA. Here again he succeeded. EZRA'S AIDES THE YEARS PASSED. Last January, Ezra Benson became Secretary of Agriculture. One of his first appointments as No. 2 man in his far-flung department was True D. Morse, who wrote the program aimed at ending meat controls under OPS. The plan was called "af common-sense meat program" by True D. Morse, and just two weeks ago, speaking to the American Meat Institute, Ezra mentioned this program in a most laudatory manner. Last Friday when Ezra lunched at the White House, sitting with him at the table with the President was Don Paarlberg, new chief economic adviser to the Agriculture Department, who, while at Cornell University, wrote a book viciously attacking OPA. .The price of food, he demanded, should take care of itself. Even though .wrong, therefore, Ezra Benson has been completely, continuingly consistent. It is quite understandable, therefore, that he winced when a caravan of cattlemen wired him from the great plains states that Guild House. Interested students are cordially invited. The Russky Chorus. Meeting will be held tonight, 7:30 p.m. in Auditorium D, Angell Hall. All students enrolled in Russian classes are invited to at- tend. Le Cercle Francals will meet tonight at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League. An excerpt from "Le Bourgeois Gentil- homme" will open the meeting, a movie "Cite Universitaire" will add a touch of Paris, and French songs and dancing will complete the evening. Everyone is invited! Roger Williams Guild. Tea and Chat Wednesday afternoon, 4:30 to 6:00, at the Guild House. American Institute of Electrical En- gineers-Institute of Radio Engineers, Joint Student Branch. First regular meeting of the year tonight, 7:30 p.m., Room 3-S, Union. D. L. Chestnut will talk on "Developments in the Pow- er Field." Pershing Rifles. All actives and pledges report in uniform at the rifle range at 1925 hrs. (7:25 p.m.) Bring gym shoes. Next week will be the last meeting at which new pledges will be accepted. Lutheran Student Association, Hill St. at S. Forest Ave., invites members I Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harry Lunn_..........Managing Editor Eric Vetter........... ..City Editor Virginia Voss........Editorial Director Mike Wolff ........Associate City Editor Alice B. Silver..Assoc. Editorial Director Diane, Decker...........Associate Editor Helene Simon........ .Associate Editor Ivan Kaye............ ..Sports Editor Paul Greenberg....Assoc. Sports Editor Marilyn Campbell.......Women's Editor Kathy Zeisler....Assoc. Women's Editor Don Campbell.......Head Photographer Business Staff Thomas Treeger.. Business Manager William Kaufman Advertising Manager Harlean Hankin....Assoc. Business Mgr. William Seden.......Finance Manager James Sharp...... Circulation Manager "I nr.A fr: or. rtc +n +ha +no . r A nnffon hn r I they were descending on Washington to talk to him about price sup- taf fr mn4 to 5:30pcm.e a this fteroon fom 4to 530 p m. a ports on meat. It is also understandable that Ezra at first wired back the Center. urging them not to come, indicating he could not see them. om a-2. - s mnm+ om me ra m~n The Congregational -Disciples Guild. Telephone 23-24-1 I I